Nicaragua pres Ortega with big early lead in vote

By FILADELFO ALEMAN, Associated Press
| 9:55 p.m.Nov. 6, 2011

Voters search the electoral rolls for the location of their respective polling table on a wall of Nicaragua's Labor Ministry during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. The statue in the center is of Nicaraguan revolutionary hero, Augusto C. Sandino, the inspiration for the political ruling party, the Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
— AP

Voters search the electoral rolls for the location of their respective polling table on a wall of Nicaragua's Labor Ministry during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. The statue in the center is of Nicaraguan revolutionary hero, Augusto C. Sandino, the inspiration for the political ruling party, the Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

Police in riot gear wait in line to vote at a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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Police in riot gear wait in line to vote at a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

Organization Americas State, OAS, Chief of Mission, Dante Caputo is met by television news cameras as he walks through a polling station during the general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaragua's 2006 election drew more than 18,000 election observers. This time election observation is much more difficult and local observers are being denied credentials. The European Union and the OAS negotiated access to Sunday's vote. The Carter Center, whose Nicaragua delegation was led by former President Jimmy Carter in 2006, has elected not to observe because of restrictions. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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Organization Americas State, OAS, Chief of Mission, Dante Caputo is met by television news cameras as he walks through a polling station during the general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaragua's 2006 election drew more than 18,000 election observers. This time election observation is much more difficult and local observers are being denied credentials. The European Union and the OAS negotiated access to Sunday's vote. The Carter Center, whose Nicaragua delegation was led by former President Jimmy Carter in 2006, has elected not to observe because of restrictions. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

An election officer shows an unmarked ballot to a voter at a polling station during the general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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An election officer shows an unmarked ballot to a voter at a polling station during the general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

A campaign poster of Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega is displayed on a light pole in front of a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. The one-time Sandinista revolutionary and and presidential candidate for the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN, appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that Ortega's critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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A campaign poster of Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega is displayed on a light pole in front of a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. The one-time Sandinista revolutionary and and presidential candidate for the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN, appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that Ortega's critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

Police in riot gear wait in line to vote at a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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Police in riot gear wait in line to vote at a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

Voters search the electoral rolls for the location of their respective polling table during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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Voters search the electoral rolls for the location of their respective polling table during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

Voters form a line outside a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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Voters form a line outside a polling station during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for victory Sunday in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

ALTERNATIVE CROP TO EFX138 - Nicaragua's President and presidential candidate for the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN, Daniel Ortega, raises his ballot before casting his vote at a polling station in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. First elected in 1984, Ortega regained power in 2006 and is now seeking re-election. Polls show that the incumbent president appears headed for a third term victory that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

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ALTERNATIVE CROP TO EFX138 - Nicaragua's President and presidential candidate for the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front, FSLN, Daniel Ortega, raises his ballot before casting his vote at a polling station in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. First elected in 1984, Ortega regained power in 2006 and is now seeking re-election. Polls show that the incumbent president appears headed for a third term victory that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

A voter searches the electoral rolls for the location of his polling table during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)— AP

+Read Caption

A voter searches the electoral rolls for the location of his polling table during general elections in Managua, Nicaragua, Sunday Nov. 6, 2011. Nicaraguan president and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appears headed for a third term victory in an election that his critics say could be the prelude to a presidency for life. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
/ AP

MANAGUA, Nicaragua 
President and one-time Sandinista revolutionary Daniel Ortega appeared to have won easy re-election in Nicaragua, according to results released Monday, overcoming a constitutional limit on re-election and reports of voting problems.

Ortega had a roughly 2-1 lead over his nearest challenger, Fabio Gadea, while former President Arnoldo Aleman was a distant third with 6 percent with about 44 percent of the votes counted by midday.

Electoral council President Roberto Rivas said shortly after Sunday's vote that a representative quick count of the results gave Ortega a large advantage as well, but he did not describe how that survey was conducted.

A domestic group of observers, Let's Have Democracy, said it recorded 600 complaints of voting irregularities, a handful of injuries in protests and 30 arrests.

But so far Ortega is winning with such a clear margin, sporadic irregularities are unlikely to have an impact.

A team from the European Union said it would issue a report Tuesday after complaints that included a polling place set on fire, election officials obstructing voters from opposing parties and protests by those who didn't receive their voting credentials.

The head of the Organization of American States observer mission, Dante Caputo, initially complained that its observers were been denied access to 10 polling stations, but later said in a statement that the issue was resolved.

He said that the OAS team didn't see "significant irregularities" but urged authorities to investigate all the complaints.

Eliseo Nunez, who headed Gadea's campaign, said 20 percent of his party's representatives had been blocked from overseeing polling places "by paramilitary mobs." He said his party would not recognize the results until the last vote had been counted.

Aleman's Liberal Constitutionalist Party said it would not recognize the results or Ortega's presidency, and said his overwhelming support was either a result of fraud or low turnout.

But it was Ortega's pact with the conservative former president in 2000 that helped consolidate Ortega's power. It ensured that the two parties would dominate Nicaraguan politics, effectively giving the two factions seats on the Supreme Court and the electoral council.

Those bodies overruled a constitutional ban on consecutive re-election or serving more than two terms in all.

Claims of widespread fraud in the 2008 municipal elections led Washington to cancel $62 million in development aid.

Ortega had yet to acknowledge a victory Monday, though he had already received congratulations from his leftist allies, Cuban President Raul Castro and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who has given the Ortega government more than $500 million a year in donations and discounted oil.

The ruling Sandinista party declared victory and caravans of thousands of supporters flooded the streets shouting "Daniel! Daniel!"

Since returning to power in 2007, the 65-year-old Ortega has boosted his popularity in Central America's poorest country with a combination of pork-barrel populism and support for the free-market economy he once opposed.

His opponents feared that if Ortega wins with a clear majority, he would be able to change the constitution to legitimize the Supreme Court ruling and pave the way to becoming president for life.

Ortega has dismissed such charges as scare tactics, and said the results would indicate the Nicaraguans are now voting "without fear."

Ortega led the Sandinista movement that overthrew dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979, and withstood a concerted effort by the U.S. government, which viewed him as a Soviet-backed threat, to oust him through a rebel force called the Contras.

The fiery, mustachioed leftist ruled through a junta, then was elected in 1984 but was defeated after one term in 1990. He lost again in 1996 and 2001 despite garnering more than 40 percent of the vote.

While the left seemed to be rolling in Nicaragua on Sunday, a right-wing former general promising to get tough on rampant crime won presidential elections in the fellow Central American nation of Guatemala.

Otto Perez Molina of the conservative Patriotic Party won 55 percent of the vote, topping tycoon-turned-political populist Manuel Baldizon of the Democratic Freedom Revival party, who had 45 percent.

Perez, 61, is the first former military leader elected president in Guatemala in the 25 years after the end of brutal military rule. While that concerns some international groups, Guatemala has a young population, and many don't remember the war.